1 / 13

Ec 123 Section 8

Ec 123 Section 8. THIS SECTION Case. Mexico: From Stabilized Development to Debt Crisis NEXT Hong Kong Financial Crisis. Currency Exchange ($ for Peso) (Mexico Perspective). Price of Peso in Dollars. Supply of Peso to $ exchange comes from Mexicans: Buying U.S. Imports

louvain
Télécharger la présentation

Ec 123 Section 8

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ec 123 Section 8 THIS SECTION Case. Mexico: From Stabilized Development to Debt Crisis NEXT Hong Kong Financial Crisis Ec 123 Section 8

  2. Currency Exchange ($ for Peso)(Mexico Perspective) Price of Peso in Dollars • Supply of Peso to $ exchange comes from Mexicans: • Buying U.S. Imports • Travel to U.S. • ‘Investing’ in the U.S. • Speculation • Central Banks SPeso $0.0759 • Demand for $ to Peso exchange comes from Americans: • Buying Mexican exports • Travel to Mexico. • ‘Investing’ in Mexico. • Speculation DPeso Quantity of exchange Ec 123 Section 8

  3. Fixed Exchange Rates are a Price Support The peso is UNDERVALUED or its price would APPRECIATE without govt. influence. Price of Peso in Dollars SPeso S’Peso The central bank must increase the supply of Peso to $ exchange. The government commits to a fixed or pegged price of their currency. $0.0759 Demand for $ to Peso exchange increases. For example, American demand for Mexican products increases. DPeso D’Peso Quantity of exchange Ec 123 Section 8

  4. Fixed Exchange Rates are a Price Support The peso is OVERVALUED or its price would DEPRECIATE without govt. influence. Price of Peso in Dollars SPeso S’Peso Supply for Peso to $ exchange INCREASES. For example, there is speculation that the Peso will devalue. The government commits to a fixed or pegged price of their currency. $0.0759 The central bank must increase the demand for Peso to keep the exchange rate up. D’Peso DPeso Quantity of exchange Ec 123 Section 8

  5. Impact of Fixed Exchange Rates If the currency is UNDERVALUED: • Central Banker must meet excess demand for the currency by supplying it. • Must be following an expansionary monetary policy. • Shows up as DEBIT on official settlements in BOP: • (Own) Currency is flowing out; Currency reserves (other country’s currencies) or gold increasing. • Exports are cheaper; imports are more expensive than what they would be without the fixed rate. If the currency is OVERVALUED. • Central Banker must meet excess demand for the currency by supplying it. • Must be following a contractionary monetary policy. • Shows up as CREDIT on official settlements in BOP: • (Own) Currency is flowing in; Currency reserves (other country’s currencies) or gold decreasing. • Exports are more expensive; imports are cheaper than what they would be without the fixed rate. Ec 123 Section 8

  6. Timing of Impact on Foreign Exchange Markets Influences on foreign exchange markets can be categorized by time interval in which they have an impact: • Short Run • Interest rate fluctuations • Expectations • Intermediate Run • Fluctuations in goods, services and investment transactions • Example: Recession dampens demand for imports • Long Run • Purchasing-Power Parity • Expectations Ec 123 Section 8

  7. Some useful questions Why do countries attempt to control the exchange rate? What happens when a currency devalues (or depreciates)? Ec 123 Section 8

  8. Real Exchange Rate The real exchange rate is the exchange rate adjusted for price-level differences among countries. • Provides a measure of the amount of goods your money will buy in another country. Formally, ER = E ×(Pdomestic/Pforeign) Sometimes it easier to think of in terms of % changes: %ΔER=%ΔE + %ΔPdomestic - %ΔPforeign Where %Δmeans ‘percentage change.’ Ec 123 Section 8

  9. Purchasing-Power Parity Purchasing-Power Parity theory says that the quantity of goods & services a currency can buy (or its purchasing power) should be the same in all countries. • Based upon the microeconomic assumption of the law of one price. • Only works for goods that are tradable. • Transportation costs and other transaction costs are assumed to be low. Ec 123 Section 8

  10. Purchasing-Power Parity In the long run the real exchange rate must be 1, or ER =1= E × (Pdomestic/Pforeign) or Pforeign= E × Pdomestic Links exchange rate pressures to inflation: %ΔE = %ΔPforeign - %ΔPdomestic Ec 123 Section 8

  11. The Big Mac Index Source: The Economist May 8, 2009, *June 2008 Ec 123 Section 8

  12. Mexico: From Stabilized Development to Debt Crisis What were the pressures on Mexico to devalue the peso? Ec 123 Section 8

  13. Mexico: From Stabilized Development to Debt Crisis Who (or what) was most at fault for the debt crisis? Could this happen to the U.S.? Ec 123 Section 8

More Related